Yes, an EF1 tornado touched down on N-15th street near the football stadium on October 14, 2012. Not a lot of damage and no one was seriously hurt.
As of November 9, 2012 the last large tornado to hit the U.S. occurred northwest of the town of Newton, Mississippi. The tornado was rated EF3 and got up to half a mile wide.
In the years 1981-2010 (a 30 year period) Kentucky had an average between 1 and 2 tornado deaths per year. However, the number of deaths in any given year can vary widely. For example, in 2008 7 people in Kentucky died from tornadoes. So far in 2012 tornadoes in Kentucky have killed at least 16 people.
No tornado hit Joplin, Missouri in 2012. However, Joplin was devastated by an EF5 tornado on May 22, 2011. That tornado directly killed 158 people, the deadliest to hit the U.S. since 1947. Three or four other people died due to indirect effects.
The Town of Henryville, Indiana was hit by an EF4 tornado on March 2, 2012.
Yes. On March 2, 2012 West Liberty, Kentucky was hit by an EF3 tornado that was part of a major outbreak. The tornado was a mile wide and traveled 95 miles, killing 11 people.
Yes, an EF1 tornado touched down on N-15th street near the football stadium on October 14, 2012. Not a lot of damage and no one was seriously hurt.
The worst tornado of 2012 would probably be the EF4 tornado that hit the towns of Henryville, New Pekin, and Marysville in Indiana on March 2, killing 11 people.
Tornadoes killed 87 people in 2012, 70 of them in the United States.
Approximately 4,380,415 people.
In 2012, 13 people were killed in 2 tornadoes in Indiana.
There were no deaths from the tornado on April 2, nor the Dallas tornado on April 3.
Aukland, New Zealand was hit by an F2 tornado on December 6, 2012 that killed 3 people.
As of November 9, 2012 the last large tornado to hit the U.S. occurred northwest of the town of Newton, Mississippi. The tornado was rated EF3 and got up to half a mile wide.
No tornado hit Joplin, Missouri in 2012. However, Joplin was devastated by an EF5 tornado on May 22, 2011. That tornado directly killed 158 people, the deadliest to hit the U.S. since 1947. Three or four other people died due to indirect effects.
In the years 1981-2010 (a 30 year period) Kentucky had an average between 1 and 2 tornado deaths per year. However, the number of deaths in any given year can vary widely. For example, in 2008 7 people in Kentucky died from tornadoes. So far in 2012 tornadoes in Kentucky have killed at least 16 people.
27,590 as of the 2012 census